There Must Be a Way

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"There Must Be a Way"
File:There Must Be a Way.png
Single by Joni James
from the album More Joni Hits
B-side"Sorry for Myself?"
Released1959
GenreTraditional Pop
LabelMGM
Joni James singles chronology
"There Goes My Heart"
(1958)
"There Must Be a Way"
(1959)
"I Still Get a Thrill"
(1959)
"There Must Be a Way"
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Single by Jimmy Roselli
from the album There Must Be a Way
B-sideI'm Yours To Command[1]
Released1967
GenreTraditional Pop
LabelUnited Artists
ProducerHenry Jerome
Jimmy Roselli singles chronology
"I'm Gonna Change Everything"
(1966)
"There Must Be a Way"
(1967)
"All the Time"
(1967)
"There Must Be a Way"
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Single by Frankie Vaughan
from the album There Must Be a Way
B-side"You're Nobody till Somebody Loves You"
Released1967
GenreVocal Pop
Length2:53
LabelColumbia Records
Frankie Vaughan singles chronology
"Cabaret"
(1966)
"There Must Be a Way"
(1967)
"So Tired"
(1967)

"There Must Be a Way" is a song written by David Saxon, Robert Cook and Sammy Gallop in 1945. The first recording was by Johnnie Johnston with Paul Baron and His Orchestra in the same year.[2]

Background

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The song was published in the post–World War II era, part of a wave of sentimental ballads expressing love, longing, and heartbreak — very much in the style of traditional pop and pre-rock balladry. It became a standard in pop and easy listening, covered by many notable artists over the years.

Early recordings

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  • Perry Como recorded the song in a 1947 session with Russ Case and His Orchestra;[3] it was released in June 1948 as the B-side to “Rambling Rose” (RCA Victor 20‑2947). The single "Rambling Rose" spent 14 weeks on the Billboard chart starting July 23, 1948, and reached a peak position of No. 18.[4]
  • Joni James recorded the song in 1959, it peaked at No. 33 on the Billboard Hot 100 spending 12 weeks there.[5] In another American chart magazine, Cashbox, the single peaked at No. 28.[6] It reached No. 30 on the Canadian singles chart and No. 24 on the UK singles chart.[7] It was her most successful song of the year, and all years after.
  • Connee Boswell and The Paulette Sisters (1945): An early recording of the song, reflecting its initial popularity.[8] She released the song as a single with the B-side "Something Sentimental".

Later recordings

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  • Jerry Vale (1965): Vale's interpretation of the song was featured on his album "There Goes My Heart", which included many past hits and standards.
  • Frankie Vaughan recorded the song in 1967,[9] it reached number 7 on the UK singles chart, (staying on the chart for 21 weeks)[10] and number 19 on the Irish Singles Chart.[11] It was his most successful song of the year, and all years after. With the success, he recorded an album with the same name, which was his only charting studio album, reaching No. 22 in the UK.
  • "There Must Be a Way" by Louis Armstrong was released in 1968, produced by Bob Thiele. It was later included on his album What a Wonderful World.

Jimmy Roselli version

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Jimmy Roselli recorded the song 1967, releasing it as a single with "I'm Yours To Command". It was his first and only single that appeared on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 93 on August 12,[12] it was his most successful song on the Billboard Easy Listening chart peaking at No. 13,[13] and his most successful single on Cashbox peaking at No. 90 and stayed on the chart for 9 weeks.[14]

After the single he had a couple charting songs, but nothing came close to his recording of "There Must Be a Way". Right after the single, like Vaughan, he recorded a new album with the same name There Must Be a Way, which was released the same year. The single would also go on to reach No. 2 on Record World's Top Non-Rock chart,[15][16] which was similar to Billboard's Easy Listening chart. On the magazine's 100 Top Pops chart the single would stall at No. 87 and quickly drop out.[17]

Charts

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Joni James
Chart (1959) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[5] 33
US Cashbox Top 100 Singles 28
CAN Singles Chart 30
UK Singles Chart 24
Frankie Vaughan
Chart (1967) Peak
position
UK Singles Chart 7
Irish Singles Chart 19
Jimmy Roselli
Chart (1967) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[12] 93
US Billboard Easy Listening[18] 13
US Cashbox Top 100 Singles[14] 90
US Record World 100 Top Pops[17] 87
US Record World Top Non-Rock[15] 2

References

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  15. ^ a b Record World magazine, September 16, 1967. Top Non-Rock Page 45, retrieved October 17, 2025, via worldradiohistory.com
  16. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  17. ^ a b Record World, August 5, 1967. 100 Top Pops page 27, retrieved October 17, 2025 via worldradiohistory.com
  18. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).